Los Angeles Times

Reneging on deal will be costly

Twitter or Elon Musk would have to pay $1 billion, depending on who backs out.

- By Kurt Wagner Wagner writes for Bloomberg.

Twitter Inc. will be required to pay a terminatio­n fee of $1 billion under certain circumstan­ces if it ends an agreement to be acquired by Elon Musk for $44 billion, according to a filing Tuesday. Musk will also be subjected to the same fee if he ends the deal.

The fee would have to be paid if Musk isn’t able to deliver the funding for the acquisitio­n as promised, for example, or if Twitter were to accept a competing acquisitio­n proposal or recommend shareholde­rs vote against Musk’s offer, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The billionair­e is taking the 16-year-old company private for $54.20 a share in one of the biggest leveraged buyout deals in history. He has lined up financing that includes $25.5 billion in debt financing from Morgan Stanley and other financial institutio­ns, including margin loans backed by his equity stake in Tesla Inc., and $21 billion in equity financing to be provided by Musk himself.

The SEC filing also includes details about changes to Twitter’s employee equity program given that the company will be private once the deal is completed. Employee stock grants will continue to vest until the deal closes, according to the filing, but any unvested stock awards will be canceled, and employees will instead have the option to be paid out in cash when those awards would have vested.

Musk’s offer price is 38% more than the stock’s close April 1, the last business day before he disclosed a significan­t stake in the company, sparking a share rally. Twitter was initially skeptical that Musk would be able to line up financing for the acquisitio­n and adopted a poison pill tactic to slow down his advance. As recently as last week there was little clarity on whether Musk’s bid would succeed. The 50year-old billionair­e himself mused at a TED event the day it was announced that even he had doubts about its prospects.

But within about two weeks, the world’s richest person was indeed able to obtain financing and Twitter agreed to his original offer price. Now that the deal has turned friendly, private equity firms — which typically shy away from hostile transactio­ns — might be more likely to come on board and write Musk a check for his portion of the funding. Some existing shareholde­rs could also decide to roll their Twitter stakes into the private company, which means that Musk might not be on the hook for much of the money himself.

When the deal is completed, Twitter will become a privately held company, “wholly owned” by Musk. The purchase, which was unanimousl­y approved by Twitter’s board, is expected to close this year, subject to shareholde­r and regulatory approval.

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